Jimmy Abrams v. The Marlin Firearms Company

CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 27, 2001
Docket2001-CA-01613-SCT
StatusPublished

This text of Jimmy Abrams v. The Marlin Firearms Company (Jimmy Abrams v. The Marlin Firearms Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jimmy Abrams v. The Marlin Firearms Company, (Mich. 2001).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2001-CA-01613-SCT

JIMMY ABRAMS AND MARY ABRAMS

v.

THE MARLIN FIREARMS COMPANY AND GARY DEDEAUX d/b/a GARY'S PAWN & GUNSHOP

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 7/27/2001 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. JOHN M. MONTGOMERY COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: CLAY COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANTS: CHARLES M. MERKEL JACK R. DODSON ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEES: JAMES A. BECKER, JR. NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - PERSONAL INJURY DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED - 02/27/2003 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED: MANDATE ISSUED:

BEFORE PITTMAN, C.J., WALLER AND CARLSON, JJ.

WALLER, JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:

¶1. Jimmy Abrams and his wife, Mary Abrams, appeal from a Clay County Circuit Court judgment

entered in accordance with a unanimous jury verdict in favor of defendants Marlin Firearms Company and

Gary Dedeaux d/b/a Gary's Pawn and Gunshop. The Abrams claim that the trial court erred in admitting

certain evidence and that the verdict was against the overwhelming weight of the evidence. We affirm.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY ¶2. On October 21, 1994, Jimmy Abrams purchased a new Marlin model 336 lever action 30-30

caliber hunting rifle from Gary's Pawn and Gunshop in West Point, Mississippi. On December 30, 1994,

Abrams sustained a self-inflicted gunshot wound to his right leg while inside his extended cab Toyota pick-

up. The bullet entered Abrams' knee and traveled through his calf.

¶3. Robin Minyard, a passer-by, found Abrams lying in the middle of Waverly-Ferry Road in Lowndes

County. At 7:50 p.m., approximately two hours after Abrams said he shot himself, a call for assistance was

placed to 911. In the meantime, Dallas Slatton, a part-time volunteer paramedic who happened to be in

the area, attended to Abrams and noted he was quite coherent given his condition. He testified as to the

presence of alcohol on Abrams' breath and tire tracks leading from nearby property to Abrams' pick-up.

Upon questioning by Slatton, Abrams confirmed that he had been spotlighting deer.1 Inside the pick-up,

Slatton noticed beer bottles both empty and full, a fresh pool of blood in the floorboard, rifles on the

passenger side, and a Q-Beam handheld spotlight plugged into the dash. Paramedics transported Abrams

to Baptist Hospital in Columbus where, despite all efforts, his leg became necrotic and gangrenous and had

to be amputated above the knee eleven days later.

1 Slatton testified that the reason he questioned Abrams was to keep him alert and talking to keep him alive.

2 Abrams' Theory of the Case

¶4. According to Abrams, on December 30, 1994, he traveled to his mother's house to target practice2

and sight the scope for the new Marlin. When he finished shooting the Marlin, he cycled a live round into

the chamber and uncocked the hammer.3 At approximately 5:30 p.m. he attempted to place the Marlin

across the backseat of his pick-up when, as he sat on the driver's seat and swung the Marlin between the

front seats, the rifle struck the chromed headrest post on the passenger seat hitting the closed hammer and

causing the rifle to fire. He alleged the bump firing was due to the defective design of the Model 336 rifle.

¶5. Abrams testified that he tied a piece of wire around his leg to slow the bleeding. He started his

manual transmission truck by pressing a clutch release button and drove to his mother's house nearby. He

testified that he did not stop at his mother's house for help since no one was home but instead attempted

to drive himself to the hospital.

Marlin's Theory of the Case

¶6. Marlin's theory of the case was that the rifle was not defective and that Abrams' own negligence,

inattention, and misuse of the rifle were the causes of his injuries. It contended the cause of the accident

was a full-cocked discharge4 of the rifle.

¶7. Marlin further asserted that Abrams could not have possibly shot himself at the time and place he

said he did and expect to survive over two hours in that condition. Abrams testified that he shot himself

at approximately 5:30 p.m. near his mother's house in New Hope in Lowndes County. This is

2 In addition to the Marlin, Abrams also had with him a Winchester rifle, a .22 caliber Browning semi-automatic rifle, and an SKS military-type rifle. 3 The Model 336 rifle is equipped with a cross-bolt safety mechanism; however, Abrams never engaged it or knew the rifle was equipped with it. 4 A full-cocked discharge is a normal firing by pulling the trigger.

3 approximately fifteen miles and a twenty-minute drive to the spot where he was found and which is on the

other side of the hospital from his mother's house. Rather, Marlin submitted that Abrams shot himself in

the woods near Waverly-Ferry Road less than half an hour before he was found.

Course of Proceedings Below

¶8. Abrams filed this products liability action against Marlin and Gary's Pawn and Gunshop alleging

the Marlin 30-30 was defective, unreasonably dangerous, and discharged without a trigger pull. The trial

court granted Abrams' motion in limine to exclude evidence of prior misdemeanor convictions for

spotlighting deer, driving under the influence, and assault and battery; evidence of Abrams' possible

consumption of alcohol prior to the accident; and evidence that Abrams was hunting deer illegally at the

time. After reconsideration prior to trial, the trial court allowed Marlin to inquire into the possible alcohol

consumption and illegal hunting.

¶9. At trial, Abrams presented expert testimony that the Marlin rifle was defective because it lacked

a passive safety device to prevent the rifle from accidentally discharging when the hammer is uncocked and

placed against a live round. However, neither expert could rule out the possibility of a full-cocked

discharge. Determining exactly how the rifle fired was hindered greatly by the loss of the spent shell casing,

since a bump-fire would leave a different firing pin indentation than would a normal firing.5

¶10. Evidence of proper gun handling techniques as it related to Abrams' handling of the rifle was also

presented. Lorne Smith, Jr., a former hunter education instructor, testified as follows about Abrams'

violation of various "commandments" of firearms safety:

5 Following the injury, game warden Ben Kilgore confiscated all of the rifles in Abrams' truck and the rounds in them. The rifles and live rounds were subsequently returned to Abrams; however, the spent hull and projectile from the Marlin were turned over to Lowndes County Sheriff's deputies working the case, and no one can account for their whereabouts.

4 The first would be–the first commandment says to treat every firearm with the same respect due a loaded gun. So any firearm that you're handling you treat it as if it is loaded so if an accident happens then you've got it pointed in a direction where no one gets hurt. The second commandment says to control the direction of the firearm's muzzle. If he would have controlled the direction of the muzzle even if it had gone off, then he would not have shot himself. The third commandment that he violated was unload firearms when not in use. Leave the actions open. Firearms should be carried empty in cases to and from shooting areas so they should be unloaded and carried in cases from one area to the other or from the shooting range back to the house or wherever. The fourth one says never point a firearm at anything you don't intend to shoot.

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